So many people have told me that what they love most about my blog, Crunchy Lutheran Mommy, is my honesty. That’s why I haven’t been posting much lately… I haven’t wanted to be honest, not on the blog, not anywhere. And now I feel like I’m in a Dr. Suess rhyme all of a sudden… sigh. I still have lots of drafts backlogged in my files. For nearly a month I neglected my weekly pregnancy posts. I haven’t wanted to take a belly picture because that would mean I’d need to smile for it, and I don’t feel like I can give you an honest smile today. Or any of the days I might have had time to put up a quick post.

Every time I see someone outside of my own home (which isn’t very often as you might imagine) I get the same reaction “You look so exhausted!” Here I am trying so hard to put on a joyful, Christ-filled, my-cup-overfloweth countenance and every single person can see right through it. So much for being a model pastor’s wife, right? But that’s the truth. Exhaustion is my truth right now. Every tiny little activity is exhausting. Serving my children is exhausting. Enjoying my children is exhausting.

Every once in a while my Dad asks me “Do you feel like you’ve bitten off more than you can chew yet?” That’s been his concern this whole adoption, and sometimes it still comes up. For months I have been saying no, but the question is starting to haunt me like a bad jingle I can’t get out of my head. And I don’t even have any cutesy music to go with it. I’m struggling right now. That’s the only honest thing I have to say, and I hate to say it. I hate to say it because the last thing I want is a slew of comments or messages or phone calls from people asking me if I’m ok or asking how they can help. Just my pride talking? Probably.

Prayer is good, but I know we’re covered in that already, without even having to ask. So why even post? Why not just say, we’re going through a tough transition time and I need to take a blogging break? Why not run away? I certainly feel like running, but running isn’t going to help me or anyone. What might help though, is being honest, putting my weaknesses out there for the world and letting ya’ll know I am far from perfect.

It might help other adoptive families have realistic expectations for when they get home. Did you know that the norm is actually to experience some level of post-adoption depression? It’s very much like post-partum blues and depression, but even more common for both adoptive moms and dads, and even more complicated because of the deep sadness that naturally accompanies the reality of adopting a hurting child. Adoption is all about loss. We don’t like to talk about it much, just like we don’t want to talk about how redemption is all about the cross. But the one is a living icon of the other, and the picture is poignant.

When we baptize our babies we dress them up in these beautiful white gowns and take family pictures and have a big reception and celebrate it. Some families remember their baptisms every year (I know we do!) and we linger on the promises and the miracles that have been given to us in our gift of baptism. But what we don’t see with our eyes as the pastor pours clear, sparkling water over that sweet child’s head is… the blood, the death. Because as much as baptism is about new life it is first about death, the death of the person being baptized, the gruesome death of Jesus on the cross. There is a saying that as Christians we do not need to fear death because we have already died. We died the death of Christ during our baptism, which means death has no hold over us – just as it had no hold over the God of the Universe. And there, in the loss and only through that loss comes the beauty and the promise of true, abundant life.

Adoption is also about loss. Life for these children only comes by means of very deep loss. Everything that was their life has to die, everything that was meant to have been theirs, that should have been theirs was taken from them. Only through that reality, can they begin a new life. But the child isn’t the only one who loses something, the family also experiences loss. In the end, it will be a blessing to us all. But right now? Wow is it hard. We had a lovely little family. Two perfectly healthy, bright, beautiful children – a boy and a girl. Sweet, sheltered, secure little ones… not a real care in the world. And then we took a hammer to all of that. We shattered our perfect little family and we changed it forever.

Now we’re a family of broken pieces and broken hearts. A family where half of our children still don’t understand what it means to have a Mommy and a Daddy. I overheard my four year old daughter telling a lady the other day that the nannies dropped Hope in her crib when she was in the orphanage. We try to not talk about things like that in front of her, but she hears and remembers everything. There is so much her little mind is trying to process: abuse, abandonment, neglect, pain… crushing pain. Things I never intentionally would have introduced to my four and two year olds, but now they are living those realities second hand by watching us as we try to help their brother and sister heal.

They were away from their home for two months; that was hard for them. Neither of them have been as secure since that trip. We spend hours a week in therapy, hospitals, referrals and appointments. Time I could have been reading stories or making fun crafts or teaching them how to bake. And us? We’re exhausted emotionally, physically and spiritually from all of it. Suddenly we are a family with trauma, a family in need of an incredible amount of healing. Overnight we went from having it all together to picking up the pieces. Did we choose this? Sort of, but not really. Were we expecting it to be hard, even this hard? Of course. But just because trauma doesn’t always come without announcing itself doesn’t mean it isn’t just as traumatic when it finally walks through your front door and decides to live with you for a while.

Adoption is hard. It is inherently loss, not just for the adoptive children, but for everyone in the child’s life. Beautiful, lovely, miraculous things come from adoption. But we do a disservice to adoptive families and their children when we overlook where that beauty came from. It came from ashes, ashes that are blown into a home, leaving the family to clean up the great mess that follows. It’s not pity that I, or any adoptive parent, needs. It’s prayer. Understanding. Support. We need to know that if we don’t make that phone call or we don’t send that thank you note or if we never reach out for help it’s not because we don’t care about you. It’s because our families have just been broken, and it’s taking all of our energy and strength to pick up all the pieces.

Sometimes we need you to reach out to us because we can’t reach out ourselves, but other times we just need space. Sometimes we need respite, other times we just need a meal we didn’t have to cook ourselves. Sometimes we need to sit and talk with someone who understands, and other times we just need people to stop asking how it’s going. But most of all we need huge heaping doses of grace and mercy and love. We need to know that the people in our lives are going to see our crazy, depressed, angry emotional roller coasters and they’re going to love us anyway.

(Just as a side note, if you are a family member or friend of an adoptive parent and you’re wondering why we aren’t asking for help, it’s probably because, especially when our children came from hard places, the kind of help we need is so specific that it would be difficult or impossible to just ask for a simple hand on something. And if we tried to ask we would either come off as ungrateful or unreasonable or both. Unfortunately, there are just situations where there is no real help that can be given without a logistical brainstorm involved. Our children’s needs and our new family dynamics make simple things, like bringing in outside help, much more complicated.)

So here’s to honesty. Here’s to dispelling the myth that adoptive families are superheroes that don’t need anyone’s help. Here’s to coming out and saying that just because we signed up for this doesn’t mean we will always have our act together, and just because we “chose” these children doesn’t mean we can’t have a bad day, or week or month… or even year. We are just like you, and just like any family, when trauma kicks off its old, muddy shoes and decides to stay a while… we’re going to struggle. And we are.

May the Lord, in His mercy, turn our sorrow to joy and our tears to laughter. May He bring the dawn quickly and banish the darkness from our midst. May He orchestrate the beauty from the ashes, and give us inclination to focus on neither, but rather to seek His face in this and in every season. Amen.

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Dalas is a mother to four with another on the way. She is seriously passionate about motherhood, adoption, being “crunchy” (a fancy way of describing how she keeps her family healthy) and her Lutheran faith. You can find her on Facebook, Twitter and on her blog, Crunchy Lutheran Mommy. You can read her original Honesty post here.

Comments

This is definitely honest, and I’ve found myself unable to write due to things going on in my life, as well. My parents fostered a 5-6 year old boy for about a year when I was a teenager, and I can relate to many of the things you are mentioning from that experience. Wishing you rest and the help that you need.

Wow, Dalas. I can see why people are drawn to your honesty. I certainly was reading this. It’s compelling and human and real. I thank you, and not lightly, for baring yourself like this here. I never thought of adoption in this way you’ve described, so poignant and articulate. But I can relate to loss and trauma, and this – “just because trauma doesn’t always come without announcing itself doesn’t mean it isn’t just as traumatic when it finally walks through your front door and decides to live with you for a while” – hits home. May you know the rest and peace that comes, even in the dark – maybe especially in the dark – and flickers beauty, comfort, the grace to simply be.

Honesty. Yes. It’s what you need. What we need. Thank you for these brave words. Preserving the pretense of a picture perfect transition could never be as life-giving as the real words of your gritty need for grace penned here. I’m so glad to be visiting from #TellHisStory and am glad to share this post with a friend who is on the adoption journey, too.

Thank you so much for sharing this. I’m going to head over to Dalas’s blog to read more about her family. We’ve also grown our family through adoption and everything she says is right on. The stress before an adoption is hard, the bumps in the road after an adoption are hard, and the family you rebuild afterward can be very different from the family you had before.
Thanks for linking up at the Shine Blog Hop,
Amber at OurCharmedLife.net